New Material Can Selectively Capture CO2 285
Socguy brings us a story from CBC News about a recently developed crystal that can soak up carbon dioxide gas "like a sponge." Chemists from UCLA believe that the crystals will become a cheap, stable method to absorb emissions at power plants. We discussed a prototype for another CO2 extraction device last year. Quoting:
"'The technical challenge of selectively removing carbon dioxide has been overcome,' said UCLA chemistry professor Omar Yaghi in a statement. The porous structures can be heated to high temperatures without decomposing and can be boiled in water or solvents for a week and remain stable, making them suitable for use in hot, energy-producing environments like power plants. The highly porous crystals also had what the researchers called 'extraordinary capacity for storing CO2': one litre of the crystals could store about 83 litres of CO2."
Like corn cobs? (Score:5, Interesting)
Like Zeolite (Score:3, Insightful)
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So how many billions of tons will we need...? (Score:3, Interesting)
To me it doesn't sound like much of a solution to anything.
Nuclear power plants, OTOH, there's a technology which could help.
Same with wind power (where practical).
etc.
Re:So how many billions of tons will we need...? (Score:4, Funny)
Yes, that's the mentally balanced answer!
After all there's nothing more benign a powerplant that outputs high-level "spent" nuclear waste that we have nowhere in the world to store, and is going to remain "hot" for at least another hundred thousand years, not to mention the radioactive contamination left behind when they finally close down, that sees their former site uninhabitable for about the same time as the aforementioned waste.
As for those trifling concerns about how such reactors safely contain and process the constant stream of radioactive steam and water created during their operation, all the aforementioned concerns rightly pale by comparison to the proven unquestionably armageddon-like catastrophic effects of carbon dioxide and smoke particles escaping into the environment.
And if there's one thing we can be unquestionably certain of, it's that absolutely no carbon whatsoever is released into the environment during the extracting, (re)processing, transporting and safe-storage of all that radioactive material. I mean, imagine the dirty bomb they could create if Al Qaeda got their hands on some coal or oil.
Oh please! Won't somebody think of the environment!
I already have a CO2 storage device (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I already have a CO2 storage device (Score:4, Funny)
Not listening to Reagan? Friggin' pinkos....
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I suppose listening only to that great bastion of unbiased scientific study, the 4:1 liberal:conservative press, is one option...
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Hah. Oh, that's funny. Or sad, depending on whether or not you actually believe it.
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Forgive me for being light on details about WHY these chemicals are good for the environment, but this is not my area. I simply recall this from a talk by Jose Fuentes at the University of Virginia, who is studying Virginia's Blue Ridge Mountains, which are similar to Sydney's Bl
Re:I already have a CO2 storage device (Score:5, Insightful)
Hopefully sourced from any trees which were cut down to make space for your house...?
But seriously, the other neat trick is that even if you cut down the wood and burn it for power, you're only putting back the CO2 which the tree took out - not releasing carbon that has been safely out of the equation for millions of years.
Sadly, though, it looks like the idea of biofuels is going to get discredited by the lamebrained alcohol-from-corn debacle.
Re:I already have a CO2 storage device (Score:5, Insightful)
Quite a few reasons actually, for one tidal power generation systems haven't been perfected yet.
and make local personal transportation free of charge and free of pollution.
Free of pollution? Maybe so, but certainly NOT free of charge - you'd end up paying for it somehow, whether it's a per ride charge or a subscription service or out of your taxes depends, but just like 'free' healthcare in nations with nationalized healthcare services, you still end up paying for it.
Resources have pretty much always been in 'short supply', it's just that as we gain methods to extract more resources, so doesn't our desires to do stuff to exploit them.
Re:I already have a CO2 storage device (Score:5, Informative)
And this is without getting into big storms, which can wipe out a whole island - let alone some man-made fixture.
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Considering the amount of foreign aid we send to Israel, yup we're still paying taxes on'em
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(Yes I got the joke, but Israelites didn't build the pyramids. They were built by paid Egyptian laborers.)
Re:I already have a CO2 storage device (Score:5, Informative)
A pyramid is a static structure. All it has to do is sit year after year.
A power-generating station is full of moving parts. Things with moving parts break down over time. You may want to look at this handy informational link [usbr.gov] which shows maintenance over time on our local power plant. (since it's run by falling water, it provides some of the world's cheapest power, regardless)
When you start talking about tidal power, you are talking about putting devices which sit in salt water day after day. Go find someone who owns a boat. ANY boat, large, small, freighter or dinghy and talk about this idea of "set it and forget it". Watch as peals of laughter come rolling from their mouth. Boat owners in this part of the world (US Pacific Northwest) will pay a substantial rental premium to moor their boats in fresh water because it saves so much money on maintenance.
Finally, remember that electricity is like no other commodity on earth. You can not store it for a rainy day. You use it when it's generated, or not at all. Even fish (our other highly perishable commodity) can be canned or packed in salt. Good luck doing that with electricity.
Yes, oil gets some subsidies. Yes, euphemistically named "energy companies" almost certainly throw their weight around to discourage development of alternative energy sources. These are fairly small market-distorting effects which reinforce (but do not change) an underlying fact: historically, petroleum has been the cheapest and most flexible means of generating energy. While we get spoiled in this part of the world by abundant hydropower, there are some fairly serious environmental consequences (check out our vanishing salmon runs!) and hydro is a one-off. Once you've dammed the river, you're done. You can't scale this solution forever.
While more needs to be done with alternative energy sources, there seems to be this meme running around that there is cheap power floating around which is being withheld from the people by "The Man". Standing in the way of that cheap power in reality is not some gigantic conspiracy, but some really tough unsolved engineering problems (i.e. how do you store enough energy to power a city for when the sun don't shine or the wind don't blow? A big pile of batteries doesn't really work).
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Except for the boobie traps of course..
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Maybe we can try for the best of both worlds. [wikipedia.org]
The NiMH conspiracy (Score:2)
Chevron (an oil company) and before that GM (famous for repressing good things) bought patents related to large NiMH batteries which is why we are stuck with just NiMH camera batteries. That patent should die in 2015 hopefully; although, perhaps something else will reach get to that low cost by that time.
By definition, a conspiracy involvin
NiMH low cost to power ratio (Score:2)
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Ok, don't discount me as a wacko just yet but, if Solar can melt sodium to retain heat efficiently to product power at night and during cloudy or stormy days, why couldn't this principle be applied to traditional electrical generation. Now think about this, it isn't actually storing the electricity, but the capacity to make more without burning more fuels and so on.
Most power plants use heat to generate steam
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Pumped hydro is insane. I can't imagine what your power loss is on taking water that you've run downhill and running it uphill again. Almost certainly in excess of 100%. If not, you have a perpetual motion machine on your hands. Go forth!
You don't use hydro to pump the water. In this thread the talk is about tidal power. Tidal power runs all night so you store the power for peak times by pumping water uphill. Wind is sorta the same, doesn't happen when you want it always so when it does get windy you store the power behind a dam for peak need.
Re:I already have a CO2 storage device (Score:4, Insightful)
Totally. Why, I hear that those bastards have suppressed some sort of globe-spanning communication network that would have allowed the populace access to vast amounts of information about every subject under the sun. Billions of pages, all at your fingertips, from a simple device in your home. Obviously, it would have made it much harder for them to control us. So those fascist parasites killed it.
Oh, wait. No, actually, the government funded the initial development of the Internet, and corporations funded a lot of the subsequent development and most of the rollout. Hmmm. I wonder if your world-view could do with a little expansion.
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If it weren't for the fascist economists, we could just get rid of money, and thus all scarcity, and everything would be free!!
Re:I already have a CO2 storage device (Score:5, Interesting)
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I had no idea about the antioxidants thing, thanks for that. But isn't any sort of smoke particle going to cause lung problems in the end?
Re:I already have a CO2 storage device (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:I already have a CO2 storage device (Score:5, Interesting)
Only if you use coal and oil as the power source for producing and transporting it!
Honestly, this one gets trotted out so often that you'd think there was some sort of thermodynamic paradox behind using a biofuel-powered tractor (or solar-powered or hydrogen-powered - or even a fricking horse provided it was fitted with a fart afterburner to kill the methane) to harvest your biofuel.
The problem is the half-baked rush to promote a uniquely expensive and inefficent biofuel (corn alcohol) without first building the infrastructure or ensuring sustainable supplies.
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Correct me if I'm wrong, but don't plants inhale oxygen and exhale CO2 at night? I'm pretty sure their 'carbon footprint' isn't as small as the sandalistas would have you believe.
"Sandalistas", huh? Nice.
Mature forests (where the mass of wood stays about constant) are about neutral -- the CO2 absorbed and fixed during photosythesis is about equal to the CO2 released from rotting branches, nighttime consumption, etc.. That forest, however, is a huge, stable carbon sink, since it absorbed a lot of CO2 while growing initially.
To expand: if you take a mature forest, it's "carbon footprint" day to day is neutral, but if you clear it, that carbon footprint is huge (and if you grow a ne
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Powerplant Modernization (Score:5, Insightful)
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With a relatively few power plants to fix up, we can actually focus on how to do it, and we can pass taxes and legislation that aren't directly targeted at individual people... so fixing up power plants becomes a hell of a lot easier than trying to fix up all the cars on the road.
Practical or easy right now? no
But it's at least a tractable problem.
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Good job
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Gasp! (Score:5, Funny)
Great Scott!
Coming Soon... (Score:3, Funny)
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Increasing Oxygen content in the atmo! (Score:2)
(Probably through a personal and major misunderstanding of biology, not through any actual malicious intent)
other uses (Score:2, Interesting)
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It sounds interesting because there is a range of things that already depend on the removal of Co2. If this stuff is more effective in both costs and performance, it might have a significant impact in ways the normal person wouldn't think of.
My SCUBA instructor was certified to use re-breathers and did so on numerous occasions. He claimed that besides looking cool, the lack of exhaust help him monitor his students better and he could react sooner if something went wro
And how does it affect the environment? (Score:5, Interesting)
More detailed link Re: . affect ... environment? (Score:5, Informative)
I doubt that long term studies have been completed. It doesn't seem like ZIFs are extremely new, this process for creating them and this particular variation are new. That said, several other sources provide better information than the CBC link and speak directly to your question. The CBC article states in first paragraph: "the crystals are non-toxic and would require little extra energy from a power plant."
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/02/080214144344.htm/ [sciencedaily.com] Suggests that this looks much cleaner than existing state of the art:
Yaghi's initial idea of what to do with the material afterwards appears to involve geologic storage.
It's also always useful to hunt down the primary source. I think this PDF [ucla.edu] is it (I only skimmed).
full? (Score:4, Interesting)
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Re:full? (Score:4, Funny)
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So when's the IPO? (Score:2)
Raises two questions (Score:4, Interesting)
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how much ENERGY does it take to make a crystal? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:how much ENERGY does it take to make a crystal? (Score:4, Interesting)
betties just aren't attracted (Score:3, Insightful)
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Of course, it doesn't necessarily account for environmental contaminants, which is basicaly how we got into this mess in the first place.
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No it won't, as the issue you mention here has absolutely nothing to do with the "Second Law of Thermodynamics" but with the "the law of conservation of energy", which is a difference
angel'o'sphere
Your own example is a counter-example (Score:2)
Economics will take care of that. (Score:2)
it's all about subsidies (Score:2)
Who would benifit from this? (Score:2)
They would fill one room of your house every year (Score:5, Informative)
As about half the other commentators have already said, this does not allow for the financial and environmental costs of producing these crystals.
They might even cost more CO2 to produce than they store.
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What to do with all those saturated crystals? (Score:2)
"But..."
"ONCE AND FOR ALL!!!"
If we take it out of the air... (Score:2)
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Please explain the math (Score:2)
From the original article at UCLA [ucla.edu] "synthesized 25 ZIF crystal structures and demonstrated that three of them have high selectivity for capturing carbon dioxide (ZIF-68, ZIF-69, ZIF-70)."
Would someone please tell me how we extrapolate the CO2 capture from 3 crystal structures to an entire liter of crystals and can accurately predict an 83-to-1 capture ratio? The math is never that simple in real applications.
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This plan suxors.
good old brute force science (Score:4, Insightful)
The next nuclear waste (Score:2)
The usual common-sense solutions like dropping it into a deep ocean subduction zon
It's better than you think (Score:2)
The point is that you can capture the CO2 and then perform some treatment on the crystals (perhaps heating or reducing the surrounding air pressure) to re-extract the CO2--much like soaking up water in a sponge then squeezing it to get the water back out. In that light, it becomes a bit more interesting since now you have the possibility of extracting carbon dioxide selectively and putting it somewhere else with a re
hmmm; what about the O2? (Score:2)
Re:Solution without a Problem (Score:5, Insightful)
* [Citation Needed]
Re:Solution without a Problem (Score:5, Interesting)
The second website looks to me like a highly biased collection of cargo cult science put together by people who specialize in fields like economics, not climatology.
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It never actually gets around to explaining why these scientists don't think the ice core data throws the link into question.
If you understood the article, it should be pretty obvious that CO2 likely didn't trigger the end of the last few ice ages given that there probably weren't any large releases of CO2 like we're making now. (And before anybody gets any big ideas: Volcanoes aren't the culprit. They release a tiny fraction as much CO2 as humans.) As the article points out, the changes likely were triggered by other factors like changes in the earth's orbit.
If the CO2 didn't trigger the changes, but does participate in a p
Re:Solution without a Problem (Score:4, Informative)
They still are. But you, like so many others, seem to be completely ignorant of the concept of rate of change. Humans are changing the CO2 levels orders of magnitude faster than natural factors have in the past, so those effects get lost in the noise.
So "humans are emitting lots of CO2" does cut it.
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* [Citation Seriously Needed]
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And yes the amount of Co2 being emitted unnaturally by humans is less then .0001% of the total green house gases. And yes, you heard that correctly, less then 1/1000 or 1 percent of the total greenhouse gases in our atmosphere at any given time.
The most abundant greenhouse gas is water vapor, with an average concentration of about 0.25% by volume, or 2500 ppmv. The amount of CO2 emitted by humans over the last 150 years is about 100 ppmv (280 to 380 ppmv, a ~35% increase). So the ratio is only a factor or 25. (It would be more accurate to compare greenhouse potentials and not straight concentrations.)
However, as I've explained to you in the past, the relative concentration of greenhouse gases is not really the important issue. What matters i
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Re:Solution without a Problem (Score:4, Interesting)
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And let me tell you something: you absolutely do not want to get caught between these two deadly lovers, because their love is destructive from our point of view. (And I guess I'm totally missing the target audience here on slashdot with a sex analogy.)
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Carbon dioxide weighs in at 1.98 grams/L at STP.
1.98*83 = 164.34 grams
They're absorbing 164.34 grams in 1 liter of the crystals. Definitely underwhelming.
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I'm guessing they
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One's opinion on that depends upon where one sits on the issue of global warming, I suppose.
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Good thing you qualified that, or it would have cued up a whole slew of Hitler jokes (one has to wonder what the typical Slashdot Grammar Nazi's "final solution" would look like.)
Anyway, sometimes we have to settle for "good enough" or "it'll do until something better comes along." When you get right down to it, our entire energy infrastructure is exactly that. We're still waiting for that something better: none of the major
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But aside from that, your first ratio is dealing in mass, and your second is volume, so you can't really compare them that way.
Re:Very Good... (Score:5, Informative)
That is so wrong that I am forced to suspend your Slashdot license.
First, that page page doesn't say "pound of crude oil"; it says "gallon". That's like 7.5 pounds of oil. So that's a 3x increase in stuff. (Which some would call "mass".) Then these crystals do 1:83 in volume, but more like 10:11 in mass. So to get rid of your pound of crude oil, you'd need about 30 pounds of these crystals.
Please go study Dimensional Analysis [tamu.edu] (aka the unit-factor method or the factor-label method). Once you have mastered that, you will be permitted to post on science-y topics again.
Send it to outer space or turn it into oil (Score:3, Interesting)
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Yes!
Uhmm... you don't happen to have some, do you?